Yung Krall

{{Short description|American former spy born in Vietnam}}

{{BLP sources|date=December 2015}}

{{Infobox spy

|name = Yung Krall

|birth_date = {{birth year and age|1946}}

|birth_place = Vietnam

|nationality = American

|spouse = John Krall

|children = Lance Krall

|country = {{flagicon|USA}} United States of America

|allegiance ={{flagicon|USA}} United States of America

|agency = FBI
CIA
NSA

|birth_name=Đặng Mỹ Dung}}

Yung Krall ({{langx|vi|Đặng Mỹ Dung}}; 1946-2023) is an American former spy born in Vietnam. Her autobiography, A Thousand Tears Falling, recounts her life growing up in the midst of the Vietnam War, as well as her life in America as a spy for the CIA, FBI, and NSA.{{cite news|title=Câu chuyện về gia đình nữ cựu điệp viên CIA gốc Việt|trans-title=The story of the family of a Vietnamese former CIA spy|author=Minh Anh|work=Voice of America|date=February 20, 2011|access-date=December 31, 2015|url=http://www.voatiengviet.com/content/yung-krall-former-viet-cia-02-20-11-116564733/896128.html|language=vi}}

She is the mother of actor and comedian Lance Krall.

Biography

Yung Krall was born Đặng Mỹ Dung in 1946 near Cần Thơ in Vietnam during the French administration of the Indochine colony, and lived there during the

Anti-French Resistance War.{{cite book |title=My Viet: Vietnamese American Literature in English, 1962 - Present |editor=Janette, Michele |year=2011 |place=Honolulu |publisher=University of Hawaii Press |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/books/9780824860189 |work=Project MUSE. Web |isbn=9780824860189 |access-date=25 October 2015}} She was nine years old at the signing of the Geneva Conference, which divided Vietnam into North and South Vietnam. Yung's mother chose to remain in South Vietnam to raise her children while her husband joined the Communist cause in the North with the NLF, eventually becoming Hanoi's ambassador to the U.S.S.R. Krall's father remained in the North for the greater part of her upbringing.

Krall gained employment working for American vendors on a U.S. Navy base near Saigon where she met Lt. John Krall, a U.S. Navy pilot, whom she later married. The two of them moved to the United States.

Using her background as a native Vietnamese, she worked with the CIA and FBI to bring down a communist Vietnamese subgroup and recruit members in the U.S. and Europe. She played a role in the capture and conviction of North Vietnamese spies Ronald Humphrey and David Truong.

References

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